Randomized trial of medical or endoscopic therapy to prevent recurrent ulcer hemorrhage in patients with adherent clots☆☆☆
Abstract
Background & Aims: Treatment of high-risk patients with nonbleeding adherent clots on ulcers is controversial. In a previous randomized trial, there was no benefit to endoscopic therapies compared with medical therapy for prevention of ulcer rebleeding. Our purpose was to test the hypothesis that patients treated with combination endoscopic therapy would have significantly lower rebleeding rates than those treated with medical therapy. Methods: In this randomized, controlled trial, 32 high-risk patients with severe ulcer hemorrhage and nonbleeding adherent clots resistant to target irrigation were randomized to medical therapy or to combination endoscopic therapy (with epinephrine injection, shaving down the clot with cold guillotining, and bipolar coagulation on the underlying stigmata). Physicians blinded to the endoscopic therapy managed all patients. Results: Patients were similar at study entry, except for older age in the medical group and lower platelet count in the endoscopic group. By hospital discharge, significantly more medically treated patients (6/17; 35.3%) than endoscopically treated patients (0/15; 0%) rebled (P = 0.011). There were no complications of endoscopic treatment. Conclusions: Combination endoscopic therapy of nonbleeding adherent clots significantly reduced early ulcer rebleeding rates in high-risk patients compared with medical therapy alone. This endoscopic treatment was safe.
GASTROENTEROLOGY 2002;123:407-413
Abbreviations: ICU , intensive care unit, UGI , upper gastrointestinal
☆ Address requests for reprints to: Dennis M. Jensen, M.D., CURE Digestive Disease Research Center, Building 115, Room 318, VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, 11301 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90073. e-mail: djensen@mednet.ucla.edu; fax: (310) 794-2908.
☆☆ Supported in part by NIH RO1 DK 33273, NIH 1K24DK 02650, and NIH DK 41301 (CURE Human Studies CORE), by Microvasive-Boston Scientific Corporation, and by a Veterans Administration HSR & D Career Development Award (to I.M.G.).
PII: S0016-5085(02)00118-X
doi:10.1053/gast.2002.34782
© 2002 American Gastroenterological Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Refers to article:
- Management of ulcers with adherent clots


